Effects of temperature on muscle pHi and phosphate metabolites in newts and lungless salamanders.

Am J Physiol

Department of Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston 02114.

Published: November 1993

The effect of acute alterations in body temperature (BT) on intracellular pH (pHi) and phosphate metabolites was assessed in white skeletal muscle of intact newts and lungless red-backed salamanders using 31P-nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. pHi decreased with increasing BT in the tail muscle of both newts and lungless red-backed salamanders. The change in pH with change in temperature from 10 to 30 degrees C was -0.018 U/degrees C in newts and -0.041 U/degrees C in red backs. The calculated alpha-imidazole for skeletal muscle cytosol did not change (0.56) in newts from 10 to 30 degrees C but fell from 0.69 to 0.43 in red-backed salamanders. Phosphocreatine (PCr)/Pi fell and Pi/beta-ATP rose with increasing temperature in both newts and red backs; however, the change was much greater in red backs. Providing the red backs with O2 at 30 degrees C led to higher pH and alpha-imidazole, comparable to that of newts, along with increased PCr/Pi and lower Pi/beta-ATP. Thus newts maintain white skeletal muscle cell cytosol alpha-imidazole constant with changes in BT, whereas red backs apparently do not. However, at the BT of preference, red backs and newts maintain similar muscle pHi and alpha-imidazole. The method of gas exchange appears to strongly influence the ability of an animal to maintain its acid-base status over a range of temperatures, and our results suggest that behavioral regulation of BT may involve alpha-imidazole regulation as well.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/ajpregu.1993.265.5.R1162DOI Listing

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